16:9 aspect ratio

rpoint16

Senior Member
Just picked up my D5500. So far so good.

How do you switch to 16:9 aspect ratio? I see the 3 preset "image size" small, medium, large all at 3:2. I've searched & no luck...
 

WayneF

Senior Member
In all the cameras, 16:9 is only for movies (sizes are shown in the Specs section in back of manual).
You can of course crop it afterwards to any shape.
 

rpoint16

Senior Member
Thanks guys! I am used to my point & shoot.

It just looks weird on my 16:9 monitors showing friends pics with white borders. I would think as hi-tech as this camera is it would have this feature along with a 4:3. I really don't want to have to crop 100 pictures after a shoot for a professional view to present.

Do any DSLR's comparable to the D5500 offer 16:9?
 

WayneF

Senior Member
Thanks guys! I am used to my point & shoot.

It just looks weird on my 16:9 monitors showing friends pics with white borders. I would think as hi-tech as this camera is it would have this feature along with a 4:3. I really don't want to have to crop 100 pictures after a shoot for a professional view to present.

Do any DSLR's comparable to the D5500 offer 16:9?


I am thinking none. But again, you can always crop them later to any shape. Some raw editors have easy ways to crop all images at once to any shape for special presentations. Then you can go back through quickly, scooting the frame up or down to center the subjects, before output of the temp copy.

Out of curiosity, which compact provides 16:9 still pictures?

Camcorders do typically only take still pictures in their same 16:9 movie format, is that your meaning?
 

rpoint16

Senior Member
I am thinking none. But again, you can always crop them later to any shape. Some raw editors have easy ways to crop all images at once to any shape for special presentations. Then you can go back through quickly, scooting the frame up or down to center the subjects, before output of the temp copy.

Out of curiosity, which compact provides 16:9 still pictures?

Camcorders do typically only take still pictures in their same 16:9 movie format, is that your meaning?

My 2013 Panasonic Luminex (takes dslr quality pics), and my new Cannon sx600, both p&s do 16:9 & 4:3.
 

aroy

Senior Member
OK here is a work around
. Open View NX or Capture NX-D.
. Select the Directory of your images.
. The thumb nail images should be now displayed on the screen.
. Select all.
. Use the crop tool, set to 16:9 preset ratio. Crop one images, all the images should be now cropped.
. Export the images to jpeg. This is where you can reduce or increase the size.
 

NFA Fabrication

Senior Member
I seriously don't understand how cameras that we paid this much for don't have this most basic of features built in. I was playing with my D3200 for 30 minutes trying to figure out where this basic setting was hiding, and googled to find this thread. All I want is an easy way to edit stills into 16:9 video projects. I hope Photoshop Elements has an easy method for this.
 

NFA Fabrication

Senior Member
Nevermind, I found out my Panasonic GH4 Takes pics in 16:9. This camera is usually mounted in my DJI S900 drone, but it does everything I need it to do unlike my Nikon, so it is worth it to remove from the camera gimbal (Pain in the ass) to use it for basic features that any camera should have these days IMO. The less stuff I have to fix in editing the better. I was about to start using my Sony point and shoot that does 16:9 for basic stuff (Mostly youtube tutorials needing still shots) until I found out my GH4 did it. Amazing that Nikon left out such a basic feature...
 

aroy

Senior Member
The thing is that to shoot in 16:9 aspect ration, the camera will trim the top and bottom. That reduces the total MP of the image, as most sensors for cameras are in 3:2 aspect ratio.

By the way, Nikon shoots HD videos in 16:9 aspect ratio out of the box. So if you are shooting videos (as opposed to stills) you get 16:9.
 

pforsell

Senior Member
Nevermind, I found out my Panasonic GH4 Takes pics in 16:9. This camera is usually mounted in my DJI S900 drone, but it does everything I need it to do unlike my Nikon, so it is worth it to remove from the camera gimbal (Pain in the ass) to use it for basic features that any camera should have these days IMO. The less stuff I have to fix in editing the better. I was about to start using my Sony point and shoot that does 16:9 for basic stuff (Mostly youtube tutorials needing still shots) until I found out my GH4 did it. Amazing that Nikon left out such a basic feature...

There are so many popular ways to crop a picture, that adding them all to an entry level camera would probably confuse the target audience. I use regularly 3:4, 4:5, 1:1 and 2:1 and even 3:1. For me 16:9 is not usually wide enough.

Cropping is just a software setting, so adding it to a camera should be trivial, but choosing the ones that please everybody...
 

NFA Fabrication

Senior Member
I get what you are both saying, but it is in my mind a very basic feature that I need, So I will use a different camera that has this basic feature, or take a still from the 1080P video from the D3200 if A ~2MP will due. But with almost every major display device these days being in a 16:9 ratio, how does Nikon not offer this as a standard shooting aspect? I get that the image will be cropped vs. what the image sensor can capture, but I think a little trimming of a 16MP sensor image will be quite acceptable for most people needing a 16:9 image. This is just Nikon dropping the ball on a very basic feature IMO.
 
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